Re: [Linaro-mm-sig] [PATCH 1/2] dma-buf.rst: Document why indefinite fences are a bad idea

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Am 21.07.20 um 10:47 schrieb Thomas Hellström (Intel):

On 7/21/20 9:45 AM, Christian König wrote:
Am 21.07.20 um 09:41 schrieb Daniel Vetter:
On Mon, Jul 20, 2020 at 01:15:17PM +0200, Thomas Hellström (Intel) wrote:
Hi,

On 7/9/20 2:33 PM, Daniel Vetter wrote:
Comes up every few years, gets somewhat tedious to discuss, let's
write this down once and for all.

What I'm not sure about is whether the text should be more explicit in flat out mandating the amdkfd eviction fences for long running compute
workloads or workloads where userspace fencing is allowed.
Although (in my humble opinion) it might be possible to completely untangle kernel-introduced fences for resource management and dma-fences used for completion- and dependency tracking and lift a lot of restrictions for the dma-fences, including prohibiting infinite ones, I think this makes sense
describing the current state.
Yeah I think a future patch needs to type up how we want to make that
happen (for some cross driver consistency) and what needs to be
considered. Some of the necessary parts are already there (with like the preemption fences amdkfd has as an example), but I think some clear docs
on what's required from both hw, drivers and userspace would be really
good.

I'm currently writing that up, but probably still need a few days for this.

Great! I put down some (very) initial thoughts a couple of weeks ago building on eviction fences for various hardware complexity levels here:

https://nam11.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fgitlab.freedesktop.org%2Fthomash%2Fdocs%2F-%2Fblob%2Fmaster%2FUntangling%2520dma-fence%2520and%2520memory%2520allocation.odt&data=02%7C01%7Cchristian.koenig%40amd.com%7C8978bbd7823e4b41663708d82d52add3%7C3dd8961fe4884e608e11a82d994e183d%7C0%7C0%7C637309180424312390&sdata=tTxx2vfzfwLM1IBJSqqAZRw1604R%2F0bI3MwN1%2FBf2VQ%3D&reserved=0

I don't think that this will ever be possible.

See that Daniel describes in his text is that indefinite fences are a bad idea for memory management, and I think that this is a fixed fact.

In other words the whole concept of submitting work to the kernel which depends on some user space interaction doesn't work and never will.

What can be done is that dma_fences work with hardware schedulers. E.g. what the KFD tries to do with its preemption fences.

But for this you need a better concept and description of what the hardware scheduler is supposed to do and how that interacts with dma_fence objects.

Christian.


/Thomas






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